Photo by Tim Arterbury on Unsplash
Ease Rating: Easy
Carbon Emission Savings: 5 kgCO2e
Impact Rating (0-5):
Impact = 0 (least) - 5 (most). This is a combination of a calculated scale and expert judgment in the absence of scientific data that directly quantifies the impact of a particular action.
5 - ~80% target progress (2,000+ kg CO2e)
4 - ~60% (1,000 - 2,000 kg CO2e)
3 - ~20% (500 - 1,000 kg CO2e)
2 - ~10% (100 - 500 kg CO2e)
1 - <10% (<100 kg CO2e)
0 - <1% (<30 kg CO2e)
0 5 - ~80% target progress (2,000+ kg CO2e)
4 - ~60% (1,000 - 2,000 kg CO2e)
3 - ~20% (500 - 1,000 kg CO2e)
2 - ~10% (100 - 500 kg CO2e)
1 - <10% (<100 kg CO2e)
0 - <1% (<30 kg CO2e)
No. of People Influenced Beyond You: 0.
Amount of Savings: $
Resilience Benefit:
Will this action help the user avoid, reduce, or recover from the impacts of (climate-driven) disasters, and, in some cases, enable the user to help others (e.g., in a family or community)?
no Impacts: đź’§ Preserve Water
Categories: Home & Work
Description
When you are making a cup of coffee, tea, or other hot item, only boil the amount of water you actually need. This will save time, use less energy, and save water. It also saves you money. Boiling too much water costs households millions in unnecessarily high energy bills.
Tips
• This action is easy. Simply, fill the mug/cup/container you want to use with cold water and then pour into your kettle to get exactly the right amount.• When you pour the boiled water back into the cup you have got the perfect amount so you do not need to worry about over-filling!
• Boiling water on an electric stove is the most efficient, followed by a microwave, and then methane (natural gas). That is especially true if your electricity is powered by clean energy because natural gas is always more polluting than clean electricity.